Its a good thing the extreme Left in this country is actually quite small and has little or no actual governmental power, nor has it ever, despite the rantings of certain commentators. The RIGHT in this country... That's another story.
There is no left in America. There is center-right (Democrats) and far-right (Republicans) and that's it. There are people that are leftists but no political institution with any power.
No. It's not left wing thinking that has a correlation to education. It's that you have young people who graduate from high school and then go to college which just so happens to be infested with radical left wing professors who are hell bent on converting impressionable young people with their rhetoric. And they have an advantage in doing so because they are authority figures.
Like I said, I am neither Liberal nor Conservative but the far left is way, way scarier now days. They preach freedom and equality and anti-bullying but, man, the second they don't get their way it is nothing but violence and terrorism and viciousness.
What is the rhetoric?
And the proof of that is where? Also, what classes is this being taught in? I doubt that med students or engineers are learning about "cultural Marxism", so it must just be in the Arts studies right? Sociology classes? Anthropology?
No. It's not left wing thinking that has a correlation to education. It's that you have young people who graduate from high school and then go to college which just so happens to be infested with radical left wing professors who are hell bent on converting impressionable young people with their rhetoric. And they have an advantage in doing so because they are authority figures.
Like I said, I am neither Liberal nor Conservative but the far left is way, way scarier now days. They preach freedom and equality and anti-bullying but, man, the second they don't get their way it is nothing but violence and terrorism and viciousness.
It just seems odd to me. I spent 4 years in Sociology at a university in Canada. Some of the things we learned are very left leaning: harsher/longer prison sentences do not serve as a deterrent, treating criminals like human beings and not animals means they have a greater chance of being productive members of society when they are released, poverty breeds crime and street crime is more a product of environment than poor personal choices, being gay is not a lifestyle choice, race is a social construct, not a biological one, etc etc. But these ideas are all backed by fact. We did the research ourselves and still found it to be true. And it made a lot of people uncomfortable (especially with crime), but that didn't change the facts.
So I think what Sithborg said has a ring of truth to it. Being educated and left leaning are correlated.
I agree with your statements. The humanities don't really have a methodology like the sciences do when it comes to testing their theories. And if they wanted real world testing, the Ethics Committees of the schools would have a field day. It's kind of a lose-lose so you will get people who are so grounded in their beliefs that they make sweeping generalizations because they're so convinced that they're right without really being able to test their ideas.
And perhaps part of it comes from the thought that they can make those statements and claim them to be true because them being true doesn't cause a lot of damage or harm. It won't be used to cut funding for areas or be used to discriminate or anything like that. So perhaps to them, the means justify the ends.
http://m.washingtontimes.com/news/2016/oct/6/liberal-professors-outnumber-conservatives-12-1/And the proof of that is where? Also, what classes is this being taught in? I doubt that med students or engineers are learning about "cultural Marxism", so it must just be in the Arts studies right? Sociology classes? Anthropology?
Colleges and universities should expose students to a diverse array of ideas. But heres the first misunderstanding just because most professors are liberal doesnt mean the average student is being force-fed liberal ideology.
In interviews I conducted with professors, I found that a large number teach on highly technical subjects where it would be downright weird to let politics enter the classroom. As one engineering professor put it when asked how politics factored into his work, a chunk of metal doesnt have politics.
http://www.latimes.com/opinion/op-e...vative-affirmative-action-20160320-story.html
In the social sciences and humanities, where political views are more relevant, I found very few academics whose stated goal was to sway students to their side of the political aisle. The vast majority of professors focus on teaching students the subject matter of their fields as well as basic skills such as analytical reading, writing and critical thinking. If current events do come up in classroom discussions, the usual pattern is for professors to promote what they see as open conversation.
No. It's not left wing thinking that has a correlation to education. It's that you have young people who graduate from high school and then go to college which just so happens to be infested with radical left wing professors who are hell bent on converting impressionable young people with their rhetoric. And they have an advantage in doing so because they are authority figures.
Like I said, I am neither Liberal nor Conservative but the far left is way, way scarier now days. They preach freedom and equality and anti-bullying but, man, the second they don't get their way it is nothing but violence and terrorism and viciousness.
So you don't deny that there are more liberal teachers than conservative?The study quoted in the Washington Times article already has the issues pointed out. As well, I'd like to point out that their method was to take the voter registration of the professors as the defining factor of whether they are liberal or conservative. This is narrow minded at the very least and outright stupid at the worst. Voting Democrat does not necessarily make someone liberal. And vice versa. My husband is conservative economically but very liberal when it comes to social issues. Pigeon-holing people into two categories and then using those two categories to make assumptions about the person on an individual level is not the best way to make a point.
As for the second article, I find it funny that "affirmative action" is touted as a solution by critics of left leaning universities, as if they would support it for evening out the ratio of minority students to white students. But I digress. Here is a quote from the article:
The facts just aren't there for this idea that universities are brainwashing students into believing in their radical left leaning ideology.
After all, if they wanted to be successful, they would need access to the students before the age of 12 (and before reason starts to set in). That's why it's easier for the religious to convert children.